UK retailers ‘self-restricting’ growth due to limited payment options

One in five don’t offer alternative payments to debit or credit cards

The UK’s top retailers are limiting online sales potential by up to 30% by not offering a range of payment options.

A study, carried out by ecommerce and digital agency Visualsoft, found that almost one in five (19%) of the UK’s top 240 retailers are failing to offer a payment choice aside from a mainstream credit or debit card.

Research by payment solution firm ACI has previously found that offering at least three payment options can increase conversion by 30%. Allowing non-bank card payments such as vouchers, mobile payments can also increase the appeal of sites.

Visualsoft’s report found that PayPal is the most popular alternative payment method, with 71% of retailers offering this alongside a traditional credit or debit card. The data also showed that retailers offering PayPal usually see around 25% of customers using this option.

Vouchers are less utilised with only 8% of retailers allowing customers to use gift cards or other common voucher types.

International growth may also be limited, with 38% of retailers offering no option to pay with international currency. Lack of local payment options for international customers can lose sites up to 13% of customers, according to some industry estimates.

Tim Johnson, chief sales officer at Visualsoft, said: “It’s the final – and potentially most critical – stage in the purchasing cycle, so it’s surprising that so many of the UK’s biggest retail players are limiting their conversion potential by overlooking the importance of payment options.

“Many shoppers may face disappointment when they are only able to use their credit in bricks-and-mortars stores. When considering the example of this Christmas period, which saw online sales grow 18% on 2016, the inability to use gift cards online seems oddly out of step with the current consumer trend for avoiding the high street and shopping from home.”

He added: “Perhaps more worrying still is that retailers are shying away from the potential of international sales. Outside of the UK, customers are already well adjusted to using alternate payment types – such as in Holland where payment solution, Ideal, processes around 55% of transactions.

“This could prove crucial in a post-Brexit era, when providing US shoppers with their most popular payment options and charging in dollars could pay dividends.”